Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Aug 1905, p. 1

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\UGUST | to have Fall business und arlier than last year. We're cause the store js clean" ped with the dregs of old opening out every day an t distinctly to their interes ything is new. Our facilities at their best. Our trade is secure from the best makers 'we buy for prompt cash. t of Dress Materials of choice new weaves and I the middle of September e best things of the season, Linens! special values, » 93¢, $1, 1.10, ck Towels, roc. B Towels, 2sc., ; Linens, 8c., roc, r2%c., - 8c, oc, 12%c¢., 15¢. © I Values ee IN A SILKS ate in securing some par- in the better grade of Black there is no chance of our more of this make at the ald ask that you come and yenuine Italian Silk, with | and beautiful rich black, $1. Our price while the Special values at §0%., 65-., { pecial values at 4gc. and 'ery pretty combinations \ DLAWESON Nh -~ / 7 ST ed English 1g (Goods for the splendid wearing velling Goods. We have est them. They are cer- are selling them at what imilar goods in Canada. Trunks, Basket Trunks, h or without straps, and one wanting a real good d see these goods. T SHOE STORE - rt as YEAR 72.. NO. 202. E. P. Jenkins Clothing Co. 50c. and 75c. | { SHIRT SALE | customers, Till Saturday Many of these are ONE-HALF PRICE Don't Miss It. E. P. Jenkins Clothing Co. TENDERS WILL BE RECEIVED BY the undersigned up to FRIDAY, Sep tember 1st, 1905 at 3 p.m. for 360 feet of Cotton Rubber Lined Hose, first quality. The t or any tender not necessarily accep A . W. SHANNON, City Clerk. Kingston, August 28th, 1905 Practical Optical Work Prescriptions for - glasses carefully FILLED. All styles of mounts and frames al- | ways in stock, with repairs. Eyes carefully examined AND GLASS- ES FITTED, | Prices for above work moderate: SMITH BROS., Vy " Marriage Licenses om E CHEAP SIDEBOARDS. 2 Black Walnut Sideboards, cost $40 each, for $15; 1 Oak Board, $25, for $12; 1 Ash Hoard, $15, for §8. All bevelled edge, large size Mirrors, all in xvod shape. TURK'S SECOND-HAND STORE 398 Princess Street. If you want to buy or sell property Real Estate Bulletin FREE TO ALL! SWIFT S REAL ES URAROR RamNCY STOUT BOY, FOR Apply British Whig me SMART BOY. APPLY A. C. WAG- goner, Wellington street | A SMART BOY, 15 OR 16 YEARS OF | age, to lenrn the Clothing Business. Roney & Co. ee ---------------------------------------------------------- A COMFORTABLE ROOM IN A QUIET house, § an eldutiy lady. Box "F." Whig office A GENERAL SERVANT ALSO A nurse girl. Apply any time to Mrs. E. C. Mitchell, 164 Karl St COMPETENT HOUSE- in the evening Emily street AT ONCE, A maid. Apply Albree Fred W. RVANT ; NO WASH- ing ;: good wages. Apply . Livimgston, 162 Barrie St ere eee LEARN THE CIGAR opportunity for a few McGowan Cigar BOYS, making; good bright boys. Co., Limited. TO VARNISHED CEDAR CANOE. be bargain. Address B. M Macauley 4 Graves St., Rochester, N call for same party, Iroquois "September 3rd. y oO Hotel, etter | TWENTY CARPEXTERS AND HELP- ers, for. North Bay and Temagami Station, * Néw Ontario; 4 $2.50 per day. Apply W i North Rey. or Arthuer Stevens, agami. -- Tem- mad Brock St. Overcoals ar ul Thomas Galloway's, 131 Also bring your old ones and bave | Style, fit and price them repaired. guaranteed to please. ER -------- MEN AND BOYS TO LFARN PLUMB | and sets at 6.839 pan. a | evening : | become complications. Apply to Mrs. | Mig. | MUST | ---------------- GENTLEMEN TO GET THEIR FALL | 1 Suits. oe at] ---- z Cheese Board, 1.30 pm. Thursday. "San Toy," Grand Opera House, 8.13 pam | Vaudeville, Lake Ontario Park, 8.30 n. m. i A parson ends many pleasant engage | ments America to Cape Vincent, 2.30 p.m. Thursday Truth and a woman's age are not on speaking terms. 3 The sun rises Thursday at 5.21 a.m. Just as the average man reaches for fame his pipe goes out. Ng, Cordelia, the mint julep iSu't coin- ed at the government mint. Women have no littie troubles ; are all big, overgrown ones. Miss Ogg will be ready to receive her on and after Sept. 1st Don't. give your friends indigestion hy trying to poke people you like down their throats. Go with the Newsboys' Str. America. of the season. How the invalids would love a health reformer who would recommend some thing good to eat! There are few they on Thursday Last excursion ties that a man can take up after be passes forty that do not must do a certain amount of | kicking or the wagon will be on top of | him most of the time. A man This day in history :(--Cleo ra died, | 30 B.C. ; Battle of Plevna pot | Railway introduced into E nd, 1860. 1 Dinner Sets We have a job line we are clearing out. A few lots of different patterns, re- gular $10, $12, for $7.50 ROBERTSON BROS.. ------ A -------------------------- FRANCIS VON BUHL, SQNSFSe | * BARITONE | Teacher of Vocal Physiology and the Art of Singing. Formerly a Student of Delasco, Italy, | and of the Voeal Physiology School of | Emil Belinke and Lennox Browne, Lon- | don, Eng., late Vocal Instructor at the | M.A. College, Michigan, U.S.A. Vocal Studio now, Réom "A. at the Williams Piano Co., Warerooms, 267 Princess St. M. A. College, May 24th, 1905. "thedast year Prof. Francis: Ven Buhl has been teaching voice culture at | the M. A. College. In the early part of | the winter he gave a Recital in the ; At this, the naturalness | his voice production com- itself to me, and the smoothness | of especially the ench and Italian songs was very pleasing. Mr. Von Buhl has supplemented marked, natural ability with serious and conscientious study, | The result is his technigue is accurate and masterful, while his interpfetation is | poetic, broad, and sympathetic. As a teacher, Mr. much liked by his pupils, who give him great praise and consider they have made excellent progress under his instruction. Very respectfully signed, LOUISE FREYHOFER, Head of the Piano Dept., M.A.C IF YOU HAVE Any difficulty in being fit- ted with Shoes, COME TO US, |and we will make that duty | a pleasant one. Wear "Allen's" Mititary Bootmakers, 84 Brock St. | @evtssssescsrseresreeee@ { of the peace agreement did not reach | » lebrated Dr. Brock's £9% 158 Female Periodical Pills sppear for the first time in Canada. The "Best" Drog Store has secured sole agency for tuis great remedy, $1. mailed on receipt of price, 24 Princess St., Kingston, Ont, | @evecssescssssssese H. POWELL | ~ CARPENTER AND JOBBER, 103 Raglan Street. STRAYED. ONE HEIFER ONE YEAR emises of sion | {ONE Cow, on Finder can property and FOR SALE. { THAT FINE PROPERTY ON THE corner of Gore and Wellington Sts. with frame house, lot by about 23 feet, balance of the Estate of the Father Davis. For particu of Joseph George, 114 late Rev. lars enquire Gore Street. i Lawn Social In Vogue. Mount Chesney, Aug. 2N.- Lawn so | vials are still the order of the day. | Many attended the {and report a good time. Thieves en te Tey ont BoE es | teres the Victoria hotel, last evening, course two months : graduates ad: | hot were seared away by the land iis No onlin an Madler Fly | Lond ior hey mucoid in making Plumbing Schools, New York, Cin- la raid. A fever of unrest has seized {iat a St. Doan. (Day and the young nen ol ou village Fs - 3 , they intend taking advantage o he dress 236 10th Ave, Now YORK | trips to the Narth-West and Toron LOST. | to. Visitors : M. Smith and W, Mur fy eee | vay, Brewer's Mills, at 'Mrs. M, Fow A NECKLACE Tuesday night. Reward sm Bod OF BLUE BEADS, |ler's; D. for its re | spent Sunday Edward Fowler Smith's, Brewer's Fowler and at J. turn to this office. Mills; Miss M. Sullivan, Oates, has -- ani. | y . return home after spending a week A PERSIAN CAT. BLACK WITH]. abel a fae Pile t ats points, sthayed from the Ran-|in this vicinity; Miss M. Wilson is at dolph Hotel about the 18th inst McGarvey Mr. andl Mrs. J. Mc Pinder will he rewardwd. Apply 196 | Keo at J. McGarvev's; WNrs. Johnston street. and daughter at R. C. Wawkey's a ------ ep sree GOED BROACH, MADE OUT OF EAR- i bet Ween valued be- ings, on Sunday night, * Montreal! and Rideau Sts. cause a wedding present. Reward fo its return to McCulla's Grocery --- 14 is better to set one man to work } do make a hundred weep, 2 pes § gone to Regina few we with his som Samuel | Jennie Sears spent Sunday last with her parents, to spend a r Cross drug store, | between Japan. and | mains is the arrangement | cordance with the terms of The Hague | { convention | their tongues, Von Buhl is very | Sign of Golden Boot. | sotial -at Railton | Wiss | DAILY a KINGSTON, ONTARI WATS? == A Secret Treaty Between Japan 'And China. i { i ALL OVER EUROPE THE PEACE NEWS WAS RE- | CEIVED WITH PLEASURE, | Russia to Pay for Caring for Her Soldiers and Sailors--Jap- anese Representatives Disap- pointed, But Hold Their Tongues. Special to the Whig. Portsmouth, N.H., Aug. 30. Peace Russia is 'mow a | certainty. Every matter of principle | has been determined, and all that re | of details. | By the terms of the agreement, reach- | ed yesterday, Russia will not pay a cent of indemnity to her victorious enemy. She will lose half of the is- | land of Saghalien, now held by the Japanese forces, but will receive back | the other without compensating Jap- | an. The actual cost to which Japsn was put in caring for the 65,000" Rus- sian soldiers and 'sailors, captured in action, will be paid by Russia, in ao This, however, will not be tribute money, and its payvient casts no stigma on Russia's pride or honor. In other words, Russia will pay no- thing, except proper expenses, and will give to Japan part of the czar's territory acquired, by conguest, hy the Japanese in the war now brought to an end. Japan also withdrew her demands for the interned warships, and the limitation of Russia's naval power in the far east. An armistice is to be arranged im- mediately. There will he no more fighting. The Russians are jubilant. They in they have achieved a great diplomatic victory, that the Japanese have been outgeneraled in their at- tempt to inflict punitive damages up on the czar's government. The Jap anese representatives, here, are deeply disappointed, but they are holding They cammot criticize those at Tokio, who were responsible for the reconciliations whith made petdce possik They anticipate, how- ever, that their people at home will be furious over the agreement of the governgient to peace on Russia's terms, -- + Pleasure In Europe. London, Aug. 30.--Exeept in official | circles at St. Petersburg and Berlin, | the news that peace has been made | was received throughout Europe with | unbounded satisfaction and rejoicing. | Hope of this result had been practi: | cally abandoned since, it was known | there was no chance of Russia yielding ! to Japan's principal demands. The idea that Japan would again abandon | the fruits of victory after repeatedly declaring the epposite intention was | hardly considered among the possi- bilities of the situation, until two days ago. Then it was whispered, in | certain diplomatic circles, that a sec: | ret agreement existed between Japan | and China, by the terms of which the | latter agreed to pay the expenses ol | the war for the restoration of Man chuYia in case Japan failed to compel Russia to pu an indemnity. There is » authority for the rumor, but it is received with a certain | amount of credence, especially since | the news has come of Japan's amaz ing sacrifice of her principal claim. | no adequa St. Petersburg Dismayed. St. Petersburg, Aug. 30. The news here until nine o'clock last evening. { It was speedily circulated by word { of mouth, and was received with gen eral incredulity. It is no exaggern tion to say that hin official circles, and amazement to sthe general public. Not for a mo- | ment had it been expected here that | Japan would abandon all her essen | tial demands. The plans of the gov { ernment are completely upset by the sudden change in the situation. The reactionaries talk chiefly of future re venge against Japan, but they are | more immediately concerned by the | vital effect of peace upon the internal situation and the resulting confusion in all the government plans. There is even rash talk of sending Gen. Line | vitech's wrmy immediately against Constantinople, in order to prevent | the return of the troops to their homes to foment revolution, and for the purpose of also retrieving the mil- itary prestige of the empire. There { cannot be the smallest doubt that the country, at large, will welcome peace | with the utmost enthusiasm, now that | an indemnity has been abandoned, and the territorial sacrifices will be a mere trifle. Will Cause Disappointment. London, Aug. 20.--~The Tokio cor { respondent of the Daily Mail says | that the terms agreed to at the peace | conference wmipuestionably will cause | the bitterest disappointment, The | treaty, of course, will be accepted, but in all probability, the cabinet, which sanctioned it will fall. The loss of half of Saghalien probably cave greater dissatisfaction than even the abandonment of an is demnity. ------------ : Drink Davies' Ceylon Tea. Forty cent quality for 25¢. Make any comparison you wish; apply anv test you choose, "Davies" Ceylon tea" will always give you the utmost sat isfaction. Last trip to Quebec direct at re duced rates, leaving September 41h per stenmer "Alexandria." Seeurs agents, | when the tolomel in<isted, he | was: always { his money, King Peter sent him it produced dismay | will | a he Berlin, Aug, 30. Belgrade is talking nothing else but a scandal in which | King f% a prominent part, | Some time ago a Russian, Cal | Protapapan, Who fought for the inde { pendence of Servia, returged to Bel | grade was awarded 300 francs by | the goverment as a reward for ser. | | vices to the eountry | A few days after his arrival he ask- | ed for an audience with King Peter, | against whom, he said, he had a claim | of 12,000 fednes, which he had ad | vanced high $8ars ago, while he was | still plain ince Karageorgeviteh, | King Peter 1 10 receive him, and was ex- | led from city and went to | udapest, where he now is, and where he has written in a daily paper an article which "has made Ning Peter | furious. 3 In 1873, thea @rticles states, Prince | Peter Ka offeviteh and one of his | Mlmerous miu Mile, Laxmay, | were living afiNice in a cottage be | Imging to & hotel proprietor, Tur | andi, Prince , who then, as now, debt, nt the time owed | RSs, the lawyer at Niee 20,000 francs, and | | M, Turandi 8,000 francs. Not being | able to pay, the couple disappeared in | the dark the night, but had to! leave all their baggage behind. The | lawyer imupediately seized the trunks and publicly stated that unless he re- ceived his money the prince's trunks | would be sold at public auction. Greatly alarmed because one of the trunks contained papers of the great- est importance; Prince Peter begged Col. Protopapan to redeem the bag gage, whi @ did, the prince asking him Aor old the trunks as security until he ld pay the 25000 francs, | A few 8 after the colonel was approached by two agents of King Milan, who offered him 200 000%ancs if he would allow them to photograph the papers contained in trunks. This offer he indignantly refused. Months passed, and he heard nothing from Prince Peter, until one day he receiv: ed. a digpateh asking him to come to | Vienna. When he had hurried to that city he was received by an agent of the prince, who said that he was at the point of death at Cetinje, and was worried about the p apers. He then foolishly gave up the trunks againsta cash payment of 3,000 francs and the prince's note for the remainder. When he came to Belgrade to | get 50 frances, but when he tried to get the larger amount he was uncerelionious- ly conducted across the frontier, and permission to see the Russian am- bassador refused. The colonel now threatens to lay bare a number of ¢candals from King Peter's life whith will force him to abdicate. SUICIDES IN GERMANY. A Steady Increase of Sell Destroy- ers is Evident, Berlin, Aug. 30. Some curious sta tistics relating to suicides have just by the government statistical department here, From these statistics it appears that during the past few years the number of sui been published EDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1905. | Killed, LATEST NEWS EVENTS OF THE. DAY GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS SIBLE FORM, ; Matters That Interest Everybody ~Notes From All Over--Little Of Everything Easily Read And Remembered. . -- - Two Hospital Beds to be Endowed : With Money, Portsmouth, N.H,, Aug. 30.~Baroff The Bishop of Toronto has benefit- | Komura, and M. Takahira, who. last' ted by his sdjourn in England, and | week attended a en party at sails for Toronto on the 31st inst, York, Me., having as- Miss Mary Cossill, fell from ome of i was i- the wooden horses of the merry-go- | ed partly for the of the York round, Fort George, N.Y., and was Hon. 8. N, Parent, Quebec, has | requested io the faet of | ceased to be a member of his former this "mumificent and unexpected gilt" ? legal firm, owing to his nt posi- | and to announce that it has been de Hum. His Jo. Cuarge arent," M.P., en Rerpat thats it ye as entered the fir as juni t- | two the hospital , nee 88 gumor part" | aver then' \ehiete inecrilted with: the Twenty-three sticks of dynamite with a rock suspended above them so that it would be caused to fall by a slight jar, were found under one end of a bridge which was being torn down at Bogytonville, N.Y. Samuel 8, Johnson, a millionaire lumbermuan of Minneapolis, is at Berkeley, Cal, of Bright's disease, de- spite the efforts of specialists b t from New York, Chicago, and his home city. Mr. Johnson was born in Canada in 1857, At the close of Rev. W. B, Riley's address at the First Baptist church, Minneapolis, Minn; a man thought to son, Returns made to the Ontario bureau of mines show that the output of me- talliferous mines and works of On- tario for the first six months of 1903 was valued at $6,520,798. There in an increase in arly overy branch and the total is decidedly in advance of that for any previous six months, A locomotive and a freight car of a mix&l train, running over the West River railway, from Brattleboro, Vi, to Whité Mill, N.Y., jumped the rails twelve miles from firattleboro, and went down a twenty five fon ment. Engineer Stuck, digu vas_ scalded 10. death, DEATH ENDS ROMANCE. Her Girlhood Fiance Killed as She Goes to Meet Him. Omethn, Neb, Aug. 30.--En route to wed the sweetheart of her girlhood, whom she had not meen for fifty vears, Mrs. Lola Moir, Lynchburg, Va. was stopped in the railroad sta- tion by a telegram announcing his death in Elmo, Wash.,, and contaih- ing information that he had left hor Brattle Sdn wr cides has been steadily increasing, both among men and women, al though so far the men exceed the women, in the proportion of four to Thegeport show that suicides children are increasing, one. among school suicides occur among men is between {fifty and sixty, and among women | between twenty and thirty. Most sui | cides occur in the spring, and fewest in December In nine-tenths of the cases the me thods adopted are drowning, hanging, and shooting. There are compara | tively few instances of the of poison, which is the means chosen | chiofly by women, omen, says the | report, show an inevitable dislike to | weleot any mode of death which might | disfigure their faces, Hse embarrassment whigh drives most | take their own lives. This fact | plays an important part with { men, but in addition a strong body lof them are vrged to suicide because { of unrequited abertion. | DEAD KITTEN ; LIVE CHILD. also wo 1 | Little Girl Falls From Window on | Playful Cat. | New York, Aug. 30.-~Anpnie Lom | bardi, two years old, leaned out of a home, on the second Houston street, to | window of her { floor of 102 Fast | watch the antics of a Kitten in | yard below. She lost her balance and { fell on the kitten. The kitten was flattened killed. The girl's ncalp was cut, Stillman said that the | probably saved her life, The girl wept | over the kitten's body when she was { lifted into the mwbulance, i { out and Dr, Royal Arcanum Rate Question, Special to the Whig, - Put-n-Bay, V., Aug. 30.- The mem bers of the { Royal Arcanum are assembled here to hold a confervnce for the consideration of the developments growing out of { i | plan adopted by the supreme council | earlier in the year abd which is to go Linto effect October Ist, has caused I quits a commotion in the order and { has evoked the most energetic protests | among the lodges and state bodies in | all parts of the country. An fort | will be made to induce the supreme { council to make a reduction in the | rates which would decrease the burden | which the older members will have to! | bear. The session will open this after | noon at the Hotel Vietor, and over 100 supreme representatives will be in | attendance. Abont fifty pairs of gents" high Buy shaving mugs at Gibton's Red | Your berths early. W. 6. Craig & Co. | rade, high laced shoes, regular $3.50 $i only $2.50 at Abernetby's, especially just before and after ex amination. In one year sixty-nine childron under fifteen years of age took their live The age when most | Among men it is nesd or pecuniary | to | the | kitten had | Supreme Council of the | | the establishment of the new rate, The | | his fortune, amounting to thousands | of dollars. Mrs, Moir is sixty-five | years old. She is prostrated in the | home of friends. Before the war, back in Lynchburg, Lola Saunders and Charles Clay were sweethearts A misunderstanding arose, and Clay left for the west and | was not heard of again. Miss Saun- | ders waited his return for five years | and was then married; her husband {left for the war the day of the wedding and three months later died. The widow was remarried and in a few years again was a widow. The first of this year she roceived a letter from her old sweetheart, Charles Clay, who had amassed a fortune, married and raised a family and had been left a widower. He wanted to corres { pond with his first love. Each had | kept photographs they had exchanged | {in vouth The wedding was arranged for Sep- tember 1st. Mrs, Moir was to make | the journey from Lynchburg to Elmo, where the ceremony was to take place, In the meantime Clay was killed ac- cidentally in Elmo. iron ili LABOR MEN TO CONFER. | Do Not Want Protectionists to i Capture Colonies. London, Ang. 30.-<The labor party | propose to send a doputation of labor [MP's to Canada. Australia, New | Zealand, and possibly to South Afriea to diseuss with representatives of labor in those colonies general sub- jets which are expected to he con sidered at the xt colonial confer ence. The suggestion emanated from the labor representative committee, The deputation is to have a full pan. date to consider any proposals which | may be put forward for bringing the | labor forces of the empire into closer {touch with each other. promo. ters of the project think it probable | that out of the conference will bo evolved an imperial labor policy. Pe {siden ordinary labor matters to be discussed at the imperial labor con- ference, an endeavor will be made to | prevent the labor party of the colon- ies being captured by the protection- te, as it is certain Mr. Chamber: {lain's proposals will be largely dis- | camsed nt the next conference. Girl Defends Father. | Wilkekbarre, Pa., Aug. 30.---While | protecting her father, twenty-year-old | Annie Riley fatally wounded Robert | Kile, of Centralia, and is in %ounty {jail atl Columbia with her three. | monthe-old child. Kile and the elder | Riloy had a struggle on the porch of ! Riley's house, and the old man was | wetting the worst of it when che girl | ran out and. fired four shots at Kile, | mtring him twice. Two officars went ha the hous to arrevt Ah gin). but she locked them in a room and escaped Afterwards Special to Detroit, i. 30.H, igar-maker, ler, a Toronto ef He ways ho will a whrrant out to- be Willian Rowen, of Sublette, III. days ee A sein. She says got up in a pew and fired a bullet | sho loves her But detesta Ad-| 4 through his heart, dying instantly. A | ler and will not live h him. She cheque for $406: was found on his per: | intimated that the river would be the solution of her trouble. ------ No More Military Servants. St. Petersburg, Aug. 30.---Followi Russian x Yang, is that it is now to do way' EE at t i allowanoe with selves with \ Feared Canada's Climate. London, Aung. 30.---A Pekin de spatch says that at a banquet to the members of the Chinese commission about to tour the world, the ques- tion was discussed of travelling via Canada and avoiding the ted States on account of the Chinese ex- clusion laws, but the idea was aban- doned on account of the rigors of, the Canadian climate. To Study Celtic. } Sydney, N.8., Aug. 30.A movemmnt is on foot the graduates of the University of Bt Hrancis Xuvier College, Antigonish, for the establish: ment of a chair for the study of Cel tie language. The I will be considered by the university suthori- ties on the occasion of the golden jubilee of the college next week, s Capt. Lesslie Will Tender, North Sydney, N.S. Aug. 30.--1t ix reported that the Leslie Wrecking com: pany, Kingston, Ont., which now has a plant on the great lakes, will put a tender for the establishment of a wrecking steamer and plant at North Sydney, for which the department of marine and fisheries is now offering « subwidy of $10,000 a year. - The Sky Overcast. Toronto, Aug. 30--The sun was overclouded this morning and as a result all the elaborate arrangements at the meterol | observatory for observing the eclipse came to naught. For about twp seconds thore was a clearance of the clouds and as light observation was made but it is of little importance. gt Cotton Man Resigns. Special to the Whig. Montreal, Aug. 30--The manage ment of the Montreal Cofton eampany announce the resignation of Frederick Lacey, manager, and the appointment in bis place of Louis Simpson, a form- er manager. Lord sad Grey, Sir Wilirid and Lady Laurier amd Hon. William Paterson aml Sir Gilbert Parker have arrived at Winn on their way to Edmonton for the inpugural ceremon: sion, and if oné asks why hoy beg the answer invariably is the story. wholesale peculations by some of-| the reverses at Liao h Er a eh ey pan, ete, earnes! mands were made upon the war offies | for army reforms, one result of which | to_provide them. EVERYBODY SAYS "The same, please," after the first order is given for'r ' Our Special Blend Tea And no wonder. It is popular for two of the best of reasons-- The quality is good. The price is reasonable. 36c. Ib, Try It, Jas. Redden @ Co. Importers of Fine Groceries YS a with her - child, she sur- rendered,

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